Try a Demo
Banner image of The Go Game Soap Making experience
Buy Now
format-icon virtual
duration-icon 45 min - 90 min

Soap Making

This Soap Making Class + Kit includes all the soap, dye, scent, and accessories to create your very own DIY custom soaps!

Melt-and-pour soap making is a great technique for beginners. This soap melts down easily and the process is simple. Once you get comfortable with this kit and the soap-making process, you can then start to incorporate more advanced techniques and have fun experimenting!

This kit includes three soap scents (lavender, rose, and vanilla) and three soap dyes (yellow, pink, and purple). This class will make ten bars of soap in total! You also have the option to add more household items such as exfoliants (oats, coffee, coconut, etc), scents (honey & essential oils), and colorants (turmeric, activated charcoal, cocoa powder, cinnamon, matcha, etc). Included is a white shea butter base.

Contents: 

  • Shea Butter Soap Base

  • Three Dyes (Pink, Yellow, Purple)

  • Three Scents (Vanilla, Rose, Lavender)

  • Dried Lavender

  • Dried Rose Petals

  • Silicone Mold

  • Wavy Cutter

  • Wood Frame

  • Melting Cup

  • Alcohol

  • Spray Bottle 

  • Stirring Sticks

Required at Home: 

  • Microwave

  • Cutting Board

  • Knife

Get a Quote

Features

It Begins with a Brick

Our Soap Making class starts from a simple brick of shea butter. From there, it's up to you to decide what shape, size, and smell you are looking to create. It's so gratifying to start from some simple ingredients and end up with something you'll enjoy for months.

It Begins with a Brick

Soap is Life

Soap making is a lot like life—both require mixing seemingly simple ingredients, then patiently waiting through challenges like heat or pressure to transform into something valuable. Just as soap takes time to cure and reach its final form, we grow and evolve through our own experiences. In the end, both soap and life are about cleansing, renewal, and finding balance through the right ingredients and care. Makes you think.

Soap is Life

Cut It Up

Cutting up soap into pieces is like breaking life into small, manageable moments—each slice a reminder to savor the present. Just as each piece of soap offers a fresh start, dividing life into little bites allows us to enjoy each moment fully, one at a time.

Cut It Up

Host & Finale Options

On-Screen Host

Leveraging our virtual event platform, Weve, our fully remote option includes one of our live hilarious hosts (virtually), and allows all of your guests to play from home or wherever.

Feedback

“Always an amazing time with Go Game! We've worked with you numerous times and it's never the same thing.”

Project Management Advisors

“This game brings people/teams together so quickly - and by the end, everyone is high fiving, laughing, and best of friends! Everyone had nothing but great things to say about this experience - thank you for everything!”

Amazon

“The Game Show bought our staff closer together. It's hard getting back after the pandemic. The laughter was phenomenal. Everyone is still talking about the good time they had this morning. The atmosphere is light and airy this morning. We will be back again.”

Postal Regulatory Commission

Return to Work 2026 | Make It Worth Coming Back

Somewhere between “just circling back” and your fourth coffee, there’s a quiet realization happening across offices everywhere. Being back in person is not the same as being connected. The desks are the same, the Slack channels are the same, the calendars are just as full, but the energy can feel a little flat. Because proximity is not the same as interaction, and interaction is not the same as connection. That part takes intention.

Right now, a lot of teams are sitting in that in-between space. Not fully remote, not fully back, and not entirely sure what “together” is supposed to feel like anymore. Which means culture does not just happen on its own. It has to be designed. And no, that does not mean another meeting about culture. It means creating moments where people actually experience it.

Here is what usually happens. You bring people together for an offsite, a team meeting, maybe even a company-wide day. Everyone shows up with good intentions. There is even a spark of energy at the beginning. But then people naturally drift toward who they already know. Conversations stay surface level. A few voices take over while others hang back. No one is doing anything wrong. It is just human nature. Left alone, a room defaults to comfort, not connection.

So if the goal is real interaction, the environment has to shift.

That is where we come in. The Go Game is built to move people out of passive mode and into participation quickly. No awkward icebreakers. No forced fun. Just structured play that makes it easy to jump in and hard to stay on the sidelines. Within minutes, teams are forming, decisions are being made, and people are collaborating with colleagues they may not have spoken to all year. It is not about turning everyone into extroverts. It is about creating a space where contribution feels natural, where different personalities actually have a place to show up.

And here is the part people do not expect. It sticks. When you solve something together, laugh together, or win something together, your brain does not file that under “work event.” It files it under experience. So the next time those same people are in a meeting, something has shifted. They talk faster. They trust quicker. They engage more fully. Not because they were told to, but because they already did.

We see it happen every time. At the start, people are polite and slightly reserved, figuring it out. Then something small breaks the pattern. A team name, a quick win, a shared laugh. From there, it builds. By the middle, the room feels completely different. Louder, looser, more alive. By the end, you do not need a survey to tell you it worked. You just look at the photo. Everyone is smiling like they are in a dental ad, fully there, not checking their phone, not halfway in.

If you are bringing your team back together, do not waste the moment. You already have people in the same place at the same time, which is the hardest part. Now make it count. Skip the default agenda. Skip the version of “fun” that people can sit through without actually engaging. Do something that changes the dynamic.

Because fun is not extra. It is not a reward at the end of the day or something you tack on if there is time. It is one of the fastest ways to build the kind of connection every team says they want.

Plan Your Experience

READY TO GET STARTED?

Talk with our sales team

Loading...